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Recent federal judicial decisions in Gjovik v. Apple Inc. (3:23-cv-04597, Northern District of California) represent a systematic judicial assault on federal environmental enforcement authority and constitutional due process protections. Through procedural manipulation disguised as case management, the defendant (Apple) and District Judge (Judge Edward Chen) created a framework that effectively immunizes corporate polluters from toxic tort liability while denying citizens fundamental constitutional rights. These decisions threaten to undermine decades of environmental protection law and federal enforcement capabilities. The implications of these decisions extend far beyond a single case, establishing precedent that could effectively eliminate private enforcement of environmental violations while creating procedural mechanisms for corporate defendants to escape liability through systematic rule manipulation.
The timeline also reveals the decision's direct conflict with federal enforcement priorities. After plaintiff's investigation revealed potential violations at Apple's semiconductor facility, her June 2023 EPA complaint triggered federal enforcement investigation at the site. The EPA's response validates that plaintiff's concerns warranted regulatory attention (precisely the type of citizen enforcement mechanism Congress intended to encourage through environmental statutes). Chen's decision penalizes the thorough investigation that led to federal enforcement action, essentially ruling that plaintiff should have filed suit before conducting the due diligence that revealed actionable violations and prompted EPA intervention. On May 20 2024, Chen ruled on a Motion to Dismiss and decided to allow Gjovik's environmental claims to move forward. Then, despite previously approving the claims, on October 1 2024, Chen dismissed the same environmental claims with leave to amend, specifically instructing Gjovik to plead "inability to have made earlier discovery despite reasonable diligence." Then, on February 27 2025, after Gjovik amended as instructed, Chen dismissed the same claims with prejudice using an entirely different legal standard based on judicial notice of public documents. In response to Apple's fifth 12(b)(6) motion, Chen took judicial notice of Apple's own regulatory documents and then made factual determinations about what "reasonable inquiry" would have reveal and what that inquiry would have consisted of. Chen then also resolved disputed questions about reasonable diligence without testimony or discovery, and concluded any factual conflict in pleadings with deference to the defendant's unsubstantial claims. Chen also denied the plaintiff the right to develop factual records on questions traditionally reserved for juries. Chen's use of judicial notice transforms regulatory filings from compliance documentation into litigation weapons. Corporate defendants can now attach their own permits and emission reports to motions to dismiss, arguing these documents establish liability notice regardless of content or interpretation complexity. Chen's reasoning would also eliminate discovery rule protection for anyone living near industrial facilities. This circumvents normal discovery processes where federal agencies could provide context about regulatory compliance, violations, and enforcement priorities. The procedure denies federal prosecutors potential cooperation from private litigants who might develop evidence useful in criminal enforcement actions. By cutting off civil discovery, Chen's approach limits the factual development that often supports federal prosecutions. Worse, he made this decision while knowing the US EPA was investigating Apple's activities at this site and he also refused to take notice of the plaintiff's request for Judicial Notice with those federal public records. Chen identified that CERCLA § 9658 preempts state discovery rules for toxic exposure cases. However, his application fundamentally misinterprets federal policy. The provision exists to ensure adequate time for complex environmental investigations; not to accelerate dismissals based on industrial permit availability. Chen's reasoning converts federal preemption from a plaintiff protection into a corporate shield, inverting Congressional intent to provide adequate investigation time for environmental claims. Chen's implicit reasoning also creates discriminatory limitation periods based on technical knowledge. This is a particularly problematic precedent for environmental enforcement. This professional expertise penalty would deter environmental professionals from residing near industrial areas and discourage the technical knowledge crucial for environmental enforcement. Under this framework:
Chen also applied the 2-year toxic exposure statute (§ 340.8) while completely ignoring the 3-year property damage statute (§ 338(b)) that would have protected Gjovik's property damage claims. This selective statute application demonstrates systematic bias toward the shortest possible limitations period and is not supported by existing law or public policy. Further, Chen entertained Apple's successive motion based on speculative "judicial economy" concerns arising out of the expectation that Apple would engage in Rambo litigation. Chen even acknowledged that Rule 12(g)(2) "does lend support to Ms. Gjovik's position," but proceeded anyways. This reasoning nullifies Rule 12(g)(2) entirely by allowing defendants to always claim future filing opportunities, and to reward them for litigation misconduct. He further justified his actions post hoc by claiming he was able to find more claims he could dismiss at his discretion (not on the merits), which is not the legal standard. The plaintiff objected to these issues, and catastrophic legal implications, in her filings and during oral arguments. Apple's legal counsel consisted exclusively of Big Law employment litigation defense counsel, including multiple partners specialized in defending large corporations from retaliation and discrimination claims, and did not include any environmental attorneys. Apple's counsel also affirmatively told the court that Apple was not under investigation for environmental issues at the site, when Apple was under active US EPA investigation and enforcement. The impact of Chen's decision specifically eliminates the discovery rule for private tort remedies and incentivizes defendants to engage in criminal obstruction until the statute of limitations expires. This also creates a bifurcated enforcement system where, upon successful concealment by the defendant, environmental violations can only be addressed through federal citizen suit mechanisms with limited injunctive relief, not through state tort law with damages liability. This bifurcation reduces deterrent effects by eliminating corporate financial liability while preserving only prospective equitable remedies, and requiring uncompensated labor by victims to enforce and obtain financial penalties to be charged against wrong-doers, but only paid to the U.S. Treasury. Judge Chen also dismissed the plaintiff's environmental tort claims as time-barred while simultaneously allowing her crime victim retaliation claims to proceed, while both are based on the overlapping and related misconduct by Apple Inc. The same judge who created multiple unconstitutional loopholes to shield Apple from tort liability also found that Apple's conduct appeared to present a strong enough case for criminal charges, as to support Labor Code protections for crime victims arising out of the same facts. At the same time, Chen also refused to acknowledge plaintiff's arguments that during the same time period that Apple claims she should have discovered their activities, Apple was actively retaliating against her, engaged in criminal witness intimidation and tampering, attempted to coerce her into an undervalued settlement of all claims while concealing what they did to her and prior to firing her, Apple made false and misleading statements to her and the government about their activities at the facility, and that she has inherent claims to crime victim restitution regardless of the form of the cause of action. Chen did not even address these arguments and his decision implies that even if an employee is a victim of criminal environmental conduct by their employer, that employer can avoid claims about the underlying harms through otherwise criminal retaliation, harassment, and obstruction in order to conceal their misconduct until the expiration of the statute of limitations. The Ninth Circuit's repeated refusal to review final judgments on these dismissed environmental claims also violates established appellate jurisdiction principles while creating complete procedural blockade for pro se crime victims. Constitutional violations become unreviewable while precedent harmful to private environmental rights becomes entrenched. This appellate denial particularly harms federal enforcement interests by preventing correction of decisions that undermine private environmental rights that complement federal enforcement capabilities. Chen's framework provides corporate defendants with a replicable strategy for escaping environmental liability, even if they did not engage in the same earlier criminal conduct and cover-up that Apple did:
Federal agencies should clarify that regulatory filing availability does not create immunity from private tort liability for environmental violations. EPA should issue guidance clarifying that citizen investigation and complaint processes support federal enforcement authority, and that the federal discovery rule preempts Chen's rogue decision. Federal prosecutors should also prioritize cases involving facilities where citizen complaints have been dismissed under similar reasoning to demonstrate federal commitment to environmental protection. ENRD should consider amicus briefing in any future cases or appeals under Chen's theories, in order to clarify federal enforcement priorities and preemption scope. Gjovik v. Apple Inc. represents systematic judicial nullification of private environmental rights through Apple's procedural manipulation. Chen's framework threatens to eliminate tolling for private tort liability and serves as a warning that a well-resourced defendant's sophisticated and malicious case management strategy can sabotage entire statutes. Federal intervention is necessary to prevent this precedent from destroying private environmental remedies that support broader enforcement goals, to provide essential deterrent effects against corporate environmental violations, and to hold Apple and their counsel accountable for making these bad faith arguments and obstructing an appeal that could have corrected this untenable and catastrophic outcome. -Ashley Published: August 24 2025
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Today, I’m proud to share the launch of Silentium Fractum, the first issue of The Journal of Structural Power & Resistance — a self-published, open-access academic journal that documents how powerful institutions weaponize legal systems, and how those systems can be tactically resisted. This issue emerges directly from my experience confronting Apple Inc. in ongoing federal litigation and regulatory proceedings. Copies of the journal and individual articles are linked below. The full journal is open access and permanently archived here: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15524514 The Journal of Structural Power & Resistance, Volume 1, Issue 1: Silentium Fractum (Summer 2025) The Journal of Structural Power & Resistance is an independent, interdisciplinary academic journal dedicated to the analysis of corporate power, legal systems, institutional violence, and tactical resistance. The journal’s mission is to dissect the structures that enable unaccountable authority — and to publish work that equips readers to confront and dismantle those systems. It exists to provide a forum for documenting how institutions exercise power through design, process, and doctrine—and how that power may be resisted, challenged, or exposed. It prioritizes work that bridges theory and praxis, drawing from law, ethics, philosophy, and lived experience. It rejects complicity with oppressive systems and embrace intellectual insurgency. Our focus spans corporate law, political philosophy, and ethics, examining how structural power perpetuates itself and how individuals and movements disrupt these systems. This journal takes as its premise that law and policy do not operate in a vacuum. They are structured systems embedded with assumptions, incentives, and political compromises that shape how truth is constructed, whose voices are heard, and which harms are made legible. Too often, the architecture of rights and remedies serves to shield institutional actors from accountability, rather than expose or rectify misconduct. This journal aims to document, analyze, and challenge the mechanisms by which systems of power are maintained—particularly through procedural obstruction, administrative evasion, retaliatory suppression, and narrative control. It welcomes work that crosses traditional boundaries: legal analysis informed by ethics and human rights; case studies grounded in lived experience; structural critiques sharpened by theory; and tactical frameworks developed through practice. This journal is a project in public reasoning, democratic accountability, and epistemic clarity. I publish in the belief that documentation itself is a form of resistance, and that naming the design is a necessary first step toward its deconstruction. I believe that resistance requires documentation—and that truth, when carefully and publicly recorded, can outlast obstruction. Volume 1, Issue 1 – Silentium Fractum focuses on the misuse of process: how litigation, regulatory procedure, and institutional policy are used to conceal wrongdoing and suppress dissent. The articles in this issue trace the contours of procedural violence, but also explore the tactical spaces within which truth may still be documented, preserved, and eventually heard. Together, these articles form an indictment of how systems designed for justice are repurposed to protect power. These articles also offer counter-possibilities: that occupation of the system, with documentation, narration, and resistance within formal processes, has the potential to crack illusions of neutrality. Our motto, nulli di, nulli domini, declares “no gods, no masters.” We believe systems of power are not inevitable. These systems are constructed — and anything constructed can be deconstructed. Welcome to The Journal of Structural Power & Resistance. Read the first Issue of the Journal: “The Journal of Structural Power & Resistance." Read the individual articles:
First published: May 26 2025. | Additional Links: OSF. Zenodo 10.5281/zenodo.15524514. 5/23/25 - Motion To Bifurcate Apple's "Omnibus" Emergency Motion to strike, Seal, Sanction, & Oppose5/23/2025 Procedural Tactics as Strategy: Apple's Litigation Conduct Across Forums Since 2021, I have been engaged in legal proceedings involving Apple Inc., arising from whistleblower disclosures and subsequent retaliation claims. These matters have spanned administrative investigations, district court litigation, and now an appeal before the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Across these venues, Apple has adopted a consistent procedural strategy that warrants scrutiny. While Apple has not engaged the substance of the claims in any meaningful fashion, it has aggressively pursued procedural containment: leveraging motion practice, filing irregularities, and calendar compression to avoid merits-based adjudication. On May 23, 2025, I filed a motion with the Ninth Circuit seeking relief from the most recent iteration of this approach — an omnibus filing designed to obscure dispositive requests within administrative procedure. That motion, however, was not filed in response to a single incident; it was necessitated by a sustained litigation posture aimed at frustrating judicial review through procedural distortion. Prior Proceedings and Established Pattern The procedural tactics now presented before the Ninth Circuit are not novel. In 2022-2024, during a formal investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor into Apple’s alleged violations of federal whistleblower protections, the company employed a strategy focused on early procedural dismissal. It avoided substantive engagement with the facts or statutory obligations under investigation, and instead sought to terminate proceedings on jurisdictional and administrative grounds. That approach continued in related proceedings before the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. There, Apple repeatedly filed early motions to dismiss — often framed as jurisdictional challenges or premature finality arguments — which were accompanied by informal and inconsistent positions across parallel dockets. Notably, Apple’s conduct in that forum included efforts to undermine briefing schedules, preempt discovery, and moot critical issues before they were heard. Now, before the Court of Appeals, that same approach has escalated into overt procedural entanglement. Litigation Tactics in the Current Appeal In the present case (No. 25-2028), Apple’s procedural tactics have included:
The cumulative effect of these tactics is procedural destabilization. The briefing schedule has been clouded; deadlines have been rendered ambiguous; and multiple dispositive and evidentiary motions have been layered into the record in ways that frustrate effective response. Motion Filed to Enforce Procedural Clarity On May 23, I filed a motion seeking to restore procedural integrity to this appellate proceeding. Specifically, I requested that the Court:
This motion is a direct response to conduct that undermines the orderly administration of justice. The Ninth Circuit's rules exist to preserve fairness and clarity in an environment where legal complexity is already high. Where one party repeatedly ignores those rules — and uses that noncompliance to gain strategic advantage — judicial intervention becomes necessary. Broader Implications What is at stake is not just docket discipline in a single case. Apple’s procedural strategy in this appeal — as in the prior administrative and district court proceedings — reflects a broader model of litigation risk containment. This model does not engage with the underlying allegations. It does not seek judicial guidance. It seeks, instead, to control the process — by constraining access to review, weaponizing timing, and burying the substance of the dispute beneath procedural complexity. When large institutional litigants are permitted to embed dispositive motions inside administrative filings, to compress adversarial response windows, and to exploit rules-based ambiguity to their advantage, the result is not zealous advocacy — it is procedural asymmetry. The Courts should not become a forum where procedural tactics displace substantive law. My motion seeks only that this appeal proceed under the rules the Court has established, with clarity, separation of issues, and fair response timelines. APPELLANT'S NOTICE AND REQUEST REGARDING DOCKET MANAGEMENT
Today, I filed two significant documents with the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, marking critical steps in my ongoing fight for accountability, justice, and transparency against Apple Inc. Request for Judicial Notice In response to Apple's recent Opposition filings filled with factual inaccuracies, I submitted a detailed Request for Judicial Notice. This filing requests the Court officially acknowledge public documents, government agency records, third-party media reports, and formal complaints that indisputably validate my claims of whistleblower retaliation, unlawful surveillance, environmental violations, and systemic procedural abuse. These materials—including extensive reporting by the Financial Times, investigative findings by EPA, and international inquiries from data protection agencies—are not merely evidence; they fundamentally rebuke Apple's attempts to deny the legitimacy of my disclosures and retaliatory experiences. Judicial notice ensures the court recognizes the reality of my situation, countering Apple's misleading narratives. Reply in Support of Emergency Injunctive Relief Simultaneously, I filed my Reply in Support of Emergency Injunctive Relief. This filing underscores the urgency of immediate judicial intervention to halt Apple's retaliatory litigation tactics. Apple's repeated procedural abuses—including threats of contempt, unjust gag orders, and suppression of evidence—have turned litigation into a mechanism of coercion, threatening not only my rights but the broader public interest in transparency and accountability. In my reply, I outlined specific, targeted relief measures, asking the Court to:
The stakes here extend beyond my individual case. Apple's tactics threaten all whistleblowers and crime victims who rely on courts as a refuge from retaliation, obstruction, and procedural manipulation. Why This Matters These filings are not just procedural steps. They're about reclaiming the integrity of legal processes, protecting whistleblower rights, and ensuring corporate accountability. Every motion, every reply, every document I submit is a step toward transparency, justice, and systemic change. Thank you for your continued support as I fight not only for my rights but for the rights of all who dare to speak truth to power View the docket here. Gjovik's Reply in Support of Motion for Injunction & Stay:
Gjovik's Motion for Judicial Notice:
5/19/2025 -Federal Court Grants My Motion Against Apple’s Evasive Answer — A Rare Procedural Win5/19/2025 Federal Court Grants My Motion Against Apple’s Evasive Answer — A Rare Procedural Win for Workers, Whistleblowers, and the Public On May 19 2025, a federal judge granted part of my motion to strike legally invalid defenses from Apple’s answer to my lawsuit — including claims that I caused my own injuries, that I had "unclean hands," or that they might find new dirt on me later. These defenses were not only baseless, they were harassment and procedural distractions — and now, they're gone. It’s a small but rare and significant win — especially for someone representing themselves, without a law firm, in a case involving retaliation, environmental exposure, civil rights, and RICO violations. After 17 months of litigation, Apple finally filed an Answer to my Fifth Amended Complaint. It was a wall of vague denials, evasive “we lack knowledge” statements (even about their own executives’ actions), and 16 generic affirmative defenses — most of which had no legal basis at all. In response, I filed:
On May 19, 2025, the court granted my motion to strike in part. The judge removed several of Apple’s most questionable defenses, including:
(Note: The court denied the 12(e) motion but openly criticized Apple’s lack of clarity, calling parts of their Answer vague and unnecessary.) These types of motions are rarely granted — especially when filed by plaintiffs, and especially when you’re doing it without a lawyer against one of the most powerful companies on Earth. By granting this motion:
This ruling isn’t flashy. But it cuts the noise, forces Apple to engage honestly, and strengthens the foundation for what’s coming next. What makes this win especially unusual:
The order struck over half of Apple’s affirmative defenses as “conclusory,” “unsupported,” or “improper under Rule 8(c).” The court didn’t issue sanctions against me (despite Apple’s demands) and acknowledged the need for clearer positions from Apple moving forward. These motions often lose. Mine didn’t. That alone should tell you something. Apple tried to argue:
The judge threw those defenses out. This ruling matters because these defenses aren’t just legal moves — they’re weapons companies use to intimidate and discredit workers who speak up. By forcing Apple to drop these arguments, the court helped make sure the focus returns to the real issues: Retaliation. Harassment. Toxic exposure. Misuse of legal systems to cover up misconduct. That’s not just a win in court. It’s a step toward fairness — for me, and for anyone who’s ever been told their story didn’t matter because the company said so. Apple now has 14 days to refile their Answer. We’ll see what they do with it. Meanwhile:
This was just one step. But it was a step in the right direction. To the workers, whistleblowers, legal nerds, journalists, and fellow survivors following this case: Thank you. I fight harder because I know you’re watching, learning, and sometimes fighting, too. Hang in there. Keep watching. The truth is coming out. -Ashley Dockets: May 19 2025 Decision & Order:
Narrative Is My Legal Training: How I Fought Back Against Apple’s Procedural Blitz — And Why That Filing Was Never Just About the Rules On May 14, 2025, Apple filed a late-night (May 15 2025 12:29 AM EST) omnibus motion in the Ninth Circuit — a procedural grenade wrapped in the language of urgency. They moved to strike my appellate brief. They moved to strike my declarations. They moved to compel sealed materials I hadn’t even had a chance to discuss with the Court. And they asked the Court to rule on all of it within 24 to 48 hours. This wasn’t about formatting. It wasn’t about rules. It was about erasing the record, neutralizing the whistleblower, and turning the Court into a gatekeeper of silence. I’m a pro se litigant. I’m disabled. I’m a whistleblower, witness, and victim. And I did what I’ve always done: I responded — not with power, but with clarity. I filed a 35-page omnibus response supported by law, fact, and my own legal training — the kind that’s based not in courtroom warfare, but in narrative, justice, and survival. What They Tried to Do In a single motion, Apple asked the Court to:
What they didn’t say in that motion — but what matters deeply — is that they refused to confer with me days earlier. When I offered to discuss the declarations, they informed me nothing was due and there was no appeal. When I offered to stipulate, they refused to engage. And then they filed a midnight three-party motion claiming that because the declarations were filed seven days after my Motion, that they need a thirty day extension. They also claimed that my previously-not-due declarations for the non-existent appeal are actually late and should be stricken. They also claimed I filed hundreds of pages of new exhibits that are overwhelming and delaying them. What I Filed in Response I didn’t file three motions. I filed one. I responded to all three of Apple’s demands — overnight — in a single, consolidated brief. I explained:
What I Was Actually Trained to Do Apple wants the Court to see me as a stealth attorney — someone with a J.D. who's “gaming the system.” That’s not just false. It’s upside down. I hold a law degree, but I have never practiced litigation. I’ve never worked in a courtroom. I’ve never taken a deposition. My lowest grades in law school were in civil procedure, evidence, and legal writing — because those courses were designed for adversarial systems I was never drawn to. What did I study?
That is the law I was trained in. Not litigation. Not striking. Not silencing. Telling the truth in a way that survives. They Tried to Gag Me — Then Made me Bleed This week, in the district court, Apple asked for a protective order to silence me — to restrict my ability to speak publicly about their conduct. Then, in the Ninth Circuit, they asked the Court to force me to disclose sealed materials — including:
I redacted what I could. I served what I had to. I filed a public declaration because I had no choice. And then I went online and deleted references from my own LinkedIn — because their demand for disclosure had real-world consequences. They tried to gag me. Then they tried to make me bleed in public. And all of it was framed as “procedure.” There was no team of lawyers behind this filing. No paralegal. No funding. Just me. I worked nonstop all night. I broke it into sections. I backed it with law. I disclosed my law school transcript. I cited trauma research. I admitted mistakes. I told the truth — in the format they demanded, but in the language I was trained to speak. They wanted to control the narrative. I reclaimed it. Final Thoughts Apple views me as a threat — to their reputation, to their procedures, to their control over the facts. But the truth is simpler:
- Ashley The full appellate docket is here. Read Apple's Motion here. Read my response here & below:
A Procedural Gag: Court Declines to Review Allegations of Surveillance, Retaliation, and Obstruction in Whistleblower Case In August 2021, Apple terminated my employment following a series of formal complaints I submitted to federal and state agencies. Those complaints alleged violations including related to:
Many of these complaints were substantiated by regulatory inspections, internal records, and public findings. The termination occurred shortly after Apple became aware of my intent to pursue formal disclosures, and documentary evidence later revealed internal plans to remove me that were initiated well before the stated termination date. Apple claims that, in 2017, I signed an “informed consent agreement” that gave them permission to conduct 24/7 biometric surveillance of me — including photographing me in the nude, recording video of me using the toilet, and tracking my GPS and body data at all times. When I filed complaints about this surveillance and lots of other misconduct by Apple, Apple fired me. That firing led to multiple federal investigations — many with complaints and notices of violation, some still ongoing. It also led to this federal lawsuit, I haven't seen the "informed consent" document, if it exists, for at least eight years - and I was never provided a copy. Currently, Apple won’t produce it to me. But they say they intend to use it as evidence that I “consented” and argue that even if I consented prior, I somehow waived my right to withdraw or challenge that consent. For over a year, Apple has tried to impose a protective order in this litigation that would use to designate as “confidential”:
Last week, Apple told the court it intends to:
Apple’s position is that the protective order presents no constitutional problem because it includes a mechanism for challenging confidentiality after the fact. However, the order requires all such materials to be treated as confidential for a minimum of 21 days pending challenge — thereby operating as a temporary prior restraint on speech related to matters of significant public concern. Apple has also stated that it intends to rely on this deposition testimony, taken under protective seal, in dispositive motion practice — such as summary judgment — while maintaining restrictions that would bar me from disclosing or rebutting the evidence in any public forum. If the court were to grant the order for Summary Judgement based on the sealed documents and testimony, the public would never know why my litigation was dismissed, only that a US Court decided I did not have valid claims against Apple. On May 13, 2025, I submitted a formal Motion to Quash to the U.S. District Court concerning these actions, identifying potential violations of federal witness protection, obstruction of justice, and retaliation statutes, including 18 U.S.C. §§ 1512 and 1513. On May 14, 2025, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California issued an order declining to stay a discovery dispute in my pending whistleblower retaliation lawsuit against Apple Inc. The ruling was issued:
Instead, the Court characterized the allegations as a “discovery dispute” and found that the protective order presented no immediate harm, describing the gag provisions as “temporary” and “litigation strategy.” The Court also vacated the hearing I had scheduled and held that the motion “clearly lacks merit.” As a result, the dispute now returns to the magistrate judge — who previously stated she is “inclined to grant” the protective order and who restricts objections to 1.5-page joint letters. Apple has made clear that the protective order will apply not only to the document in question, but also to my responses to questions about it; internal company practices involving anatomical imaging; and potentially other categories of whistleblower-related evidence. The law prohibits this. Protective orders cannot be used to shield evidence of possible criminal conduct; silence litigants from participating in regulatory or public interest reporting; preemptively restrict access to materials never disclosed in discovery. Nonetheless, the Court declined to address those questions. Today, May 14 2025, I filed a notice with the Ninth Circuit and submitted an emergency motion to stay the Court’s order. I have also notified the National Labor Relations Board, the Department of Labor, and other agencies with overlapping jurisdiction. If permitted to stand, this approach will convert a standard civil discovery tool into a mechanism for preemptive suppression of whistleblower testimony — with no judicial review of the underlying facts. The Court’s preemptive denial of the Motion to Quash — without full briefing or hearing, and while an appeal on related issues is pending — raises questions under basic procedural fairness doctrines. It also conflicts with the Ninth Circuit’s directive in Foltz v. State Farm, 331 F.3d 1122 (9th Cir. 2003), which cautions against reflexively sealing or designating materials without adequate judicial scrutiny and a compelling factual record. Protective orders are not meant to create an asymmetric evidentiary environment. In this case, the party seeking confidentiality:
Under controlling precedent — including Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, Foltz v. State Farm, and Kamakana v. City and County of Honolulu — courts are required to:
The order Apple seeks would operate as a gag on testimony concerning:
If courts allow discovery protective orders to gag parties from discussing those same facts with regulators, the result is a chilling effect on protected speech — especially where the designations are made preemptively, without access to the documents in question. Moreover, the timing of the ruling — issued without briefing or hearing, and while serious allegations of obstruction are pending — raises policy questions about whether protective orders are being used inappropriately to shield conduct from regulatory oversight. Protective orders serve an important function in modern litigation. But they must not be used — deliberately or by omission — to suppress evidence of public concern, to insulate corporate actors from regulatory scrutiny, or to impair the ability of whistleblowers to defend themselves in court. The May 14 ruling, entered without hearing, briefing, or direct engagement with the legal issues presented, illustrates how process can be used not to protect rights — but to avoid reviewing them altogether. Stakeholders in the legal community should be concerned when procedural expediency supplants meaningful adjudication, especially where speech, surveillance, and public accountability intersect. When procedural mechanisms are used to suppress evidence without review, courts risk not merely denying justice, but disabling the very processes meant to ensure it. -Ashley -- Ashley M. Gjovik is a former senior engineering program manager at Apple and a federally recognized whistleblower with matters pending before multiple federal agencies and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. May 13 2025 Motion to Quash
May 14 2025 Order
May 14 2025 Motion to Stay Order
On May 13, 2025, I filed a motion in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. The motion was necessary because Apple once again attempted to use the court system to suppress whistleblower disclosures, obstruct testimony, and weaponize procedure to retaliate against me for participating in federal agency proceedings.
But this time, I didn’t just oppose what they filed — I filed it for them. As evidence. Apple's Discovery Tactics: Litigation as Retaliation Apple has pursued a confidentiality protective order against me for over a year — a mechanism it hopes will retroactively validate the company’s unlawful policies and restrict my ability to speak about:
On May 13, Apple’s litigation counsel demanded I authorize a finalized joint discovery letter and exhibit packet. I did — explicitly under protest, with preserved objections. Then something changed. Obstruction Risk, Criminal Exposure, and Procedural Reversal After I invoked 18 U.S.C. §§ 1512 and 1513 — federal criminal statutes governing witness tampering and retaliation — counsel for Apple abruptly refused to file the very document she had demanded all day. She instead insisted I file it, despite its origin and framing as Apple’s submission. That reversal came after weeks of threats that Apple would file it unilaterally and blame me for delay. But once counsel realized that filing a document designed to suppress protected testimony could carry legal and ethical consequences, she tried to pass the responsibility to me — the whistleblower and pro se litigant — to file a document that could help facilitate my own silencing. So I Filed It — as an Exhibit to my Motion to Quash I did not file the joint discovery letter with the magistrate. I filed it as "Exhibit D" to my Motion to Quash and Request to Stay Discovery (ECF No. 112), submitted directly to the federal Judge in the U.S. District Court. In the motion, I request that the district court:
What Apple intended as a procedural offensive — a protective order to limit speech — is now preserved as evidence of retaliation, obstruction, and overreach. Notified the Ninth Circuit That same day, I filed a Notice of Supplemental Filing with the Ninth Circuit in Case No. 25-2028. The notice informs the Court of the retaliatory litigation tactics and includes:
This filing supports my pending Motion for Injunction and Stay Pending Appeal (Rule 8) and demonstrates the live, ongoing risk of procedural retaliation. Filed a New NLRB Charge Separately, I filed a new NLRB unfair labor practice charge citing:
Apple’s litigation conduct — including efforts to impose prior restraints on testimony, designate whistleblower disclosures as confidential, and suppress public references to NLRB settlements — forms the factual basis for this new charge. When Procedure Becomes Proof This isn’t just a story about filings — it’s a case study in how corporations attempt to use process as punishment. Apple tried to:
They didn’t expect that I’d file everything — including their own words — as evidence. Now it’s all in the record:
-Ashley On May 7, 2025, I filed a motion for injunction pending appeal with the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Gjovik v. Apple. The motion seeks immediate protection from further discovery and litigation conduct by Apple Inc. while my appeal is pending, particularly in light of serious issues involving crime victims' rights, retaliation, and ongoing constitutional and statutory violations. This motion follows the district court’s dismissal of claims involving racketeering (RICO), toxic exposure, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) and California’s Unfair Competition Law (UCL). My appeal challenges, among other things, the court’s denial of injunctive relief sought under the CVRA and UCL. Pending that appeal, I am now seeking interim protection under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 8(a)(2) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 62(c), which allow courts to preserve the status quo during an interlocutory appeal. I have also invoked 18 U.S.C. § 3771(d)(3), which expressly provides victims of federal crimes the right to seek immediate relief from a court when their rights are being denied. The motion outlines how Apple’s current conduct—particularly discovery demands seeking trauma-related medical records, witness information, and other invasive inquiries—poses an immediate risk of irreparable harm, including retraumatization and unlawful retaliation against a federally protected whistleblower and crime victim. The legal grounds for the injunction include:
The relief requested is narrow: to temporarily stay discovery and related retaliation until the Ninth Circuit rules on the underlying appeal, which directly raises these protective issues. This case raises significant questions regarding the intersection of corporate retaliation, discovery abuse, and statutory rights afforded to crime victims and whistleblowers. Allowing discovery to proceed in this context—while the lawfulness of that discovery is on direct review—would not only risk further harm to the Appellant, but also contravene the statutory mandates of the CVRA and undermine the integrity of the appellate process. This motion is not about delay; it is about ensuring that litigation does not become a tool of continued intimidation or retaliation. It is also about enforcing clear and enforceable rights guaranteed to victims under federal and state law. The Ninth Circuit docket is here: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69805803/gjovik-v-apple-inc/ A copy of the motion is directly available here: Your browser does not support viewing this document. Click here to download the document. 05/06/2025 - Appellant’s Opening Brief Filed in Gjovik v. Apple, Ninth Circuit Case No. 25-20285/6/2025 On May 6, 2025, I filed my Opening Brief with the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Gjovik v. Apple Inc., Case No. 25-2028. The brief challenges the district court’s dismissal of multiple federal and state claims involving post-employment retaliation, environmental exposure, civil rights violations, and corporate racketeering activity. The appeal challenges both the district court’s denial of injunctive relief and its dismissal with prejudice of claims brought under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), the California Unfair Competition Law (Bus. & Prof. Code § 17200), California’s Bane and Ralph Civil Rights Acts, common law torts, and state and federal toxic tort theories. The complaint arises from Apple’s retaliatory conduct following my protected disclosures to government agencies, including federal environmental authorities and law enforcement. This appeal arises from a complex action concerning Apple’s alleged pattern of unlawful conduct following my termination, including threats, harassment, reputational interference, and concealment of toxic exposures at one of its semiconductor sites. The central legal issues on appeal involve both procedural and substantive errors committed at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage, as well as the district court’s refusal to grant leave to amend or to issue injunctive relief protecting crime victim rights under federal and state law. The brief seeks reversal and remand on several grounds, including:
This appeal implicates important legal and policy questions regarding:
This appeal presents issues of first impression in the Ninth Circuit concerning the application of crime victim rights in civil proceedings, the scope of post-employment retaliation as a basis for RICO liability, and the limits of judicial discretion in denying leave to amend complex statutory claims involving concealed harm. It also raises critical questions about the use of discovery and protective orders in cases involving active retaliation, surveillance, and obstruction of protected disclosures. The case implicates ongoing public policy concerns at the intersection of corporate accountability, environmental compliance, and whistleblower protection. The factual allegations are supported by contemporaneous disclosures to multiple government agencies and are consistent with broader federal enforcement actions in related contexts. Procedural Status and Next Steps The Ninth Circuit has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and § 1292(a)(1). In parallel with this appeal, Appellant has filed a Motion for Injunction Pending Appeal seeking to stay discovery and other retaliatory litigation conduct pursuant to Fed. R. App. P. 8(a)(2) and Fed. R. Civ. P. 62(c). That motion remains pending before the Court. Apple’s responsive brief is due in accordance with the scheduling order, after which Appellant will submit a reply brief. All filings, including the Opening Brief and Injunction Motion, are available at: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69805803/gjovik-v-apple-inc/ This appeal seeks to vindicate the rights of whistleblowers, ensure accountability for environmental and retaliatory misconduct, and affirm that procedural doctrines must not be used to shield unlawful corporate behavior from judicial scrutiny. - Ashley The Ninth Circuit docket is here: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/69805803/gjovik-v-apple-inc/ A copy of the brief is directly available here: Your browser does not support viewing this document. Click here to download the document. |
AuthorUpdates from Ashley Gjovik about her whistleblower battle against Apple Inc. Archives
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